ARTH/CLAR 342: 海角网 Art and Archaeology
5 credits
Winter 2023
MWF 2-3:20pm
OUG 136
NOTE: TO ENTER ODEGAARD, YOU MUST HAVE YOUR HUSKY ID!
Prof. Levin-Richardson (you can call me Professor Levin-Richardson, Professor L-R, or just Professor)
Pronouns: she/her/hers
Office Hours: Wednesdays 3:30-4:20pm in person (I wear a mask when holding office hours in my office; Zoom option available, too鈥攑lease email me in advance so I can set it up) and by appointment
Office: Denny 227; enter the main doors of Denny, pass the water fountain and elevator, and it鈥檚 the
first office on the left
Description
This class explores the art, architecture, and archaeology of the ancient 海角网s and those living under 海角网 colonization from the 8th century BCE to the 4th century CE. From monuments created by women and enslaved individuals, to the public structures of the city of Rome (such as the Colosseum and the Pantheon), to the local art that persisted in 海角网-occupied Britain, Egypt, Libya, Spain, and Syria, this class pays particular attention to how identities were created through art and architecture.
Learning Objectives
- Be able to identify and correctly apply art-historical terminology and concepts
- Be able to locate 海角网 art and architecture within its geographic context
- Be able to situate and discuss 海角网 art, architecture, and archaeology within its geographical, historical, and social/cultural context
- Be able to analyze and discuss the intersection of 海角网 art, architecture, and archaeology with power and various types of identities
Supporting your learning and well being
If you know of something that might affect your learning (technology problems; health or family crisis; religious observance) please contact me as soon as possible, ideally at the beginning of the quarter, so that I can make appropriate accommodations. Below you can find further resources:
- UW Academic Support:
- UW Counseling Center:
- Husky Health and Well-Being:
- Disability Resources for Students:
- If you have already established accommodations with Disability Resources for Students (DRS), please communicate your approved accommodations to me at your earliest convenience so we can discuss your needs in this course.
- If you have not yet established services through DRS, but have a temporary health condition or permanent disability that requires accommodations (conditions include but not limited to: mental health, attention-related, learning, vision, hearing, physical or health impacts), you are welcome to contact DRS at uwdrs@uw.edu or DRS offers resources and coordinates reasonable accommodations for students with disabilities and/or temporary health conditions. Reasonable accommodations are established through an interactive process between you, your instructor(s) and DRS. It is the policy and practice of the University of Washington to create inclusive and accessible learning environments consistent with federal and state law.
- Religious Accommodations:
- Washington state law requires that UW develop a policy for accommodation of student absences or significant hardship due to reasons of faith or conscience, or for organized religious activities. The UW鈥檚 policy, including more information about how to request an accommodation, is available at . Accommodations must be requested within the first two weeks of this course using the .
Required Readings
The required textbook for this class is listed below and can be purchased or rented from the U bookstore () ($58 for digital rental), from amazon.com ($49.30 for digital rental), and from other sites, and there will be a copy on reserve in Odegaard. Other required readings can be found on the course website. Each lecture in the schedule below has one or more readings to be read in advance of that class session. For the second class, for example, please have read pages 20-33 and 36-37 of the course textbook (which I refer to as Fullerton on the schedule) before coming to class. These readings are a starting point for class lectures, which often will expand upon the assigned readings and/or present new material. Thus, I strongly recommend careful reading of the assigned material as well as attending class.
Fullerton, Mark. 2019. 海角网 Art & Archaeology: 753 BCE to 337 CE. Thames & Hudson.
Assignments and Grading
- Canvas Quizzes: see schedule below. The lowest three quizzes will be dropped. 40%
- Exam 1: Monday February 6, in-person during class time. Covers readings, lectures, and other class material from Week 1 W 鈥 Week 5 W. 25%
- Exam 2: Friday March 10, in-person during class time. Covers readings, lectures, and other class material from Week 6 W-Week 10 M. 25%
- Final assignment: Submit on Canvas by Tuesday March 14 4:20pm. Covers readings, lectures, and other class material from the whole course. 10%
Canvas quizzes to be completed before each class session will assess the vocabulary/terminology you learned in the previous class session (see learning objective 1 above). Exams will assess your knowledge of geography (learning objective 2 above) and ask you to analyze 海角网 art and architecture in its historical, cultural, and social contexts (learning objective 3 above). The final assignment asks students, in whatever medium they prefer (writing, visual art, audio clip, etc.), to engage with four examples from class of identity being created through art and architecture (learning objective 4 above). More information about each assignment will be posted in advance on Canvas.
Your final course grade is calculated from these assignments in the proportions given. Please prepare carefully for these assignments and please contact me in advance if you have any questions about how to best prepare. There is no extra credit.
Further Expectations:
- COVID and Wellness
- The University recommends inside UW facilities; High-quality masks .
- , you must stay home, even if you are fully vaccinated. Classes will be recorded so that you can keep up with course material from home.
- Please remember to follow the if you test positive, if you are exposed to COVID-19, have an exposure or develop symptoms. If you have COVID-19 questions, .
- No recording, photographing, posting, or distributing of course materials of any kind is permitted without my written authorization.
- The University of Washington prohibits the selling of notes online or through any other channels.
- Getting in touch with each other
- Please check Canvas and your UW email daily; this is how I will communicate with you about pertinent information. You are responsible for all information disseminated over email and through the course website.
- I鈥檓 available in office hours for you! If you are anxious about assignments, please set up a time well in advance of the assignment or exam so we can discuss strategies. I鈥檓 also happy to chat about any other class-related concerns you have, or study abroad opportunities, how to follow your interest in archaeology or ancient history, etc. I am happy to answer questions over email, but please check the syllabus first to see whether the answer is there.
- I will respond to emails by the end of the next working day (which means that if you email me on Friday afternoon, I may not respond until Monday afternoon).
- Grading
- Students are expected to adhere to ethical behavior in their work, including following guidelines posted for each assignment concerning group work and plagiarism/cheating. Failure to adhere to these policies will be considered an and can be reported to the Office of Student Conduct, and you might receive a zero on the assignment. If you have any questions about what is or is not allowable for an assignment, I鈥檇 be more than happy to clarify!
- I鈥檇 be happy to discuss any of your graded work with you, but I ask that you wait twenty-four hours after receiving your assignment back in order to begin to process my feedback. After the twenty-four-hour period, please feel free to email me to set up a time for a meeting. Due to University policy, I cannot discuss grades over email.
Schedule of Topics and Required Readings
Week 1: The Mediterranean from 1000-500 BCE
W Jan 4: Introduction; The Greeks and Italy
F Jan 6: The Etruscans and Italy [note: class is prerecorded; look under Panopto tab]
- Fullerton 20-33 (skip 鈥淩omulus鈥檚 Rome鈥 on p. 22, and stop before section on 鈥淭he Fran莽ois Tomb at Vulci鈥 on p. 33), 36-37 (stop at end of p. 37 before 鈥淒uring Classical and Hellenistic times鈥), 46 (box on 鈥淭erracotta Sculpture鈥)
Week 2: The Mediterranean from 1000-500 BCE; Art, Architecture and Identities during the 海角网 Regal Period and Republic
M Jan 9: The Phoenicians and Italy. QUIZ 1 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 1 W and F)
- Doak, Brian R. and Carolina L贸pez-Ruiz. 2019. 鈥淚ntroduction.鈥 The Oxford Handbook of the Phoenician and Punic Mediterranean, ed. Brian R. Doak and Carolina L贸pez-Ruiz Oxford.
- Hayne, Jeremy Mark. 2019. 鈥淭he Italian Peninsula.鈥 The Oxford Handbook of the Phoenician and Punic Mediterranean, ed. Brian R. Doak and Carolina L贸pez-Ruiz Oxford.
W Jan 11: 海角网 Regal Period and transition to Republic. QUIZ 2 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 2 M)
- Fullerton 18-19, 22 (the box on 鈥淩omulus鈥檚 Rome), 44-47 (stop before section 鈥淭he Legacy of Etruscan Art鈥)
- Torelli, Mario. 2006. 鈥淭he Topography and Archaeology of Republican Rome,鈥 in A Companion to the 海角网 Republic, eds. N. Rosenstein and R. Morestein-Marx. Blackwell. 81-101. [read only pages 81-84 (stop before the heading 鈥淭he Patrician Republic鈥); 88 (beginning with paragraph 鈥淭he ruling class of the mid-Republic鈥︹)-94 (stop before heading 鈥淟uxuria Asiatica鈥)]
F Jan 20: Public Art during the Republic. QUIZ 3 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 2 W)
- Fullerton 48-73
Week 3: Art, Architecture and Identities during the 海角网 Republic
M Jan 16: NO CLASS (MLK DAY)
W Jan 18: Art of the Household during the Republic. QUIZ 4 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 2 F)
- Fullerton 74-99
F Jan 120: From Republic to Empire. QUIZ 5 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 3 W)
- Fullerton 100-125
Week 4: Art, Architecture and Identities during the 海角网 Republic and Early Empire
M Jan 23: Culture contact; Etruscans during the 海角网 Republic. QUIZ 6 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 3 F)
- Versluys, Miguel John. 2013. 鈥淢aterial Culture and Identity in the Late 海角网
Republic (c. 200鈥揷. 20),鈥 in Companion to the Archaeology of the 海角网 Republic, ed. J. D. Evans. Blackwell. 429-440. [read only sections 2, 3; and 6: pages 431-432; 436-438]
- Fullerton 33-36 (鈥淭he Fran莽ois Tomb at Vulci鈥), 37-43 (starting with 鈥淒uring Classical and Hellenistic times鈥), 47 (section beginning 鈥淭he Legacy of Etruscan Art鈥)
W Jan 25: Augustus. QUIZ 7 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 4 M)
- Fullerton 128-151
F Jan 27: The Flavians QUIZ 8 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 4 W)
- Fullerton 168-176 (stop before "Cancelleria Reliefs")
- Fullerton 178-183 (stop before section on "Domus Flavia")
- Fullerton 194-203 (start with paragraph beginning 鈥淭his entire area鈥︹)
Week 5: Art, Architecture, and Identities during the Early Empire
M Jan 30: Provincial and Private Art in the Early Empire. QUIZ 9 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 4 F)
- Fullerton 204-231
W Feb 1: Black Individuals in 海角网 Art. COMPLETE QUIZ 10 BY CLASS TIME FOR A FREE 100 POINTS!
- Sarah Derbew. 鈥淎n Investigation of Black Figures in Classical Greek Art.鈥 The Iris. April 25 2018.
- Excerpts from Snowden, Frank M., Jr. 2010 [1976]. 鈥淚conographical Evidence on the Black Populations in Greco-海角网 Antiquity.鈥 In The Image of the Black in Western Art: From the Pharaohs to the Fall of the 海角网 Empire, ed. David Bindman and Henry Louis Gates Jr. New Edition. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press. [in week 5 folder]
F Feb 3: Review
Week 6: Art, Architecture, and Identities during the High Empire
M Feb 6: Exam 1: Art, Architecture, and Identities through the Early Empire
W Feb 8: Trajan
- Fullerton 234-259
F Feb 10: Hadrian and Antonines [note: class is prerecorded; look under Panopto tab] QUIZ 11 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 6 W)
- Fullerton 260-286
Week 7: Art, Architecture, and Identities in the Provinces
M Feb 13: Provincial Art in the High Empire. QUIZ 12 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 6 F)
- Fullerton 286-300, 304-305 [the section on 鈥淗adrian鈥檚 Wall and the 鈥淟imits of Empire"], 306 [starting with the section on "Sculpture in the Provinces"]-310 [stop before section on Funerary Art and Sarcophagi]
W Feb 15: Northwest Provinces. QUIZ 13 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 7 M)
- Hingley, Richard. 2012. 鈥淓xploitation and Assimilation: The Western 海角网 Empire from Augustus to Trajan.鈥 In A Companion to 海角网 Imperialism. Brill. 265-276. [read sections 4-5]
- Chimirri-Russell, Geraldine. 2008. 鈥淭aking an Oblique Point of View: The Challenges of Interpretation and Display in Museums.鈥 The International Journal of the Humanities 5: 115-126.
F Feb 17: Rome and Egypt. QUIZ 14 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 7 W)
- Riggs, Christina. 2018. 鈥淎rt and Identity in 海角网 Egypt.鈥 In Beyond the Nile: Egypt and the Classical World, Jeffery Spier, Timothy Potts, and Sarah E. Cole. Los Angles: J. Paul Getty Museum. Pp. 218-223.
- Beyond the Nile catalogue entries 138-146
Week 8: Art, Architecture, and Identities in the Late Empire
M Feb 20: NO CLASS (PRESIDENTS鈥 DAY)
W Feb 22: Severans. QUIZ 15 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 7 F)
- Fullerton 316-341 [feel free to skip section on "Mummy portraits" on p. 322]
F Feb 24: The Art and Archaeology of Sexuality. QUIZ 16 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 8 W)
- Beard, Mary. 2008. The Fires of Vesuvius: Pompeii Lost and Found. Belknap. [read pp. 233-240 "Visiting the Brothel" in the week 8 folder]
- Levin-Richardson, Sarah. 2020. "海角网 and Un-海角网 Sex." In Un-海角网 Sex: Gender, Sexuality and Lovemaking in the 海角网 Provinces and Frontiers, ed. R. Collins and T. Ivleva. Routledge. 346-359.
Week 9: Art, Architecture, and Identities in the Late Empire
M Feb 27: Soldier Emperors and the Tetrarchy. QUIZ 17 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 8 F)
- Fullerton 342-365
W March 1: Constantine [note: class is prerecorded; look under Panopto tab] QUIZ 18 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 9 M)
- Fullerton 366-381
F March 3: NO CLASS! QUIZ 19 DUE BY CLASS TIME (on vocab from Week 9 W)
Week 10: Legacies
M March 6: Fascist Appropriations of the 海角网 Past. QUIZ 20 DUE BY CLASS TIME (freebie!)
- Gessert, Genevieve. 2014. 鈥淚deological Applications: 海角网 Architecture and Fascist 海角网it脿,鈥 in A Companion to 海角网 Architecture, ed. R. B. Ulrich and C. K. Quenemoen. Blackwell. 426-445.)
W March 8: Review
F March 10: Exam 2: Art, Architecture, and Identities in the High and Late Empire
Final Assignment due: Tuesday March 14 4:20pm
|
Percentage Earned |
Grade-Point Equivalent |
|---|---|
|
100-97 |
4.0 |
|
96-95 |
3.9 |
|
94 |
3.8 |
|
93 |
3.7 |
|
92-91 |
3.6 |
|
90 |
3.5 |
|
89-88 |
3.4 |
|
87 |
3.3 |
|
86 |
3.2 |
|
85 |
3.1 |
|
84 |
3.0 |
|
83 |
2.9 |
|
82 |
2.8 |
|
81 |
2.7 |
|
80 |
2.6 |
|
79 |
2.5 |
|
78 |
2.4 |
|
77 |
2.3 |
|
76 |
2.2 |
|
75 |
2.1 |
|
74 |
2.0 |
|
73 |
1.9 |
|
72 |
1.8 |
|
71 |
1.7 |
|
70 |
1.6 |
|
69 |
1.5 |
|
68 |
1.4 |
|
67 |
1.3 |
|
66 |
1.2 |
|
65 |
1.1 |
|
64 |
1.0 |
|
63 |
0.9 |
|
62-61 |
0.8 |
|
60 |
0.7 [lowest passing grade] |
|
59 and x < 59 |
0.0 |